RUSSIAN WATCH-MAKING BUSINESS.
HISTORY AND FACTS
Second half of the XV century.
1404 - Lazar Serbin, a monk, made the first tower dock for the Moscow Kremlin by request of the Great Prince Vasiliy. Only the words of praise in the Troitskaya chronicle about the mechanism made by the watchmaker- remain today. Chronicles mentioned the installation of the first tower dock in
XVI century.
Clocks decorated towers of many fortresses and monasteries of the Russian state. In 1539, Semer Solovetskiy, a watchmaker from
XVII century.
There was an independent category of craftsmen-watchmakers in
First half of the XVIII century.
Watchmakers and jewelers of the XVIII were true virtuosos. They spent years in scrupulous work over creation of some unique piece - as a result, clocks cost very much, were regarded as items of luxury and were affordable only for crowned heads and for very rich people.
A mantelpiece clock of gilded bronze in the shape of a lyre was made for Katherine the Second decorated by her portrait in a medallion. Its pompous, solemn form underlined significance and grandeur of the august person. A clock made by Ivan Petrovich Kulibin, a self-taught genius, consists of 427 parts, but the whole complicated mechanism fits into a case as big as a goose-egg.
Second half of the XVIII century.
The clock '
The Bronnikovs, carvers-craftsmen, carved clocks of different wood species: cases - of burl (tumors growing on tree trunks), mechanisms, faces and chains - of boxwood, and hands - of honeysuckle. In the best clock made by the Bronnikovs even the spring is carved out of wood.
Clocks made by the clockmaker Mikhail Evlampievich Perkhin - one of the best craftsmen of the Faberge jeweler company - were equally unique. The clocks made by Perkhin, as well as many Easter surprise items, made by the firm, were egg-shaped.
1769-1778. By direction of Katherine the Second, two clock-macking factories - in
1784-1804. G. A. Potyomkin organized in his estate, Dubrovna, a factory school where 33 pupils from serfs were taught clock-making. The enterprise made clocks 'of all sorts', both pocket watches and wall striking clocks not inferior to West European samples.
First half of the XIX century.
1815 - House of Pavel Bure is founded. Later Bure will be granted the title of 'supplier of the Emperor's Court' and will become estimator of 'His Imperial Majesty''. The tsarist government purchased watches for rewards in the army - with engravings on the clocks respective to the combat arm of the rewarded person.
1826 - Henry Mozer, a Swiss, founded in
Names of individual craftsmen D. Tolstoy, I. Mezgin, I. Nosov etc. are also known.
Second half of the XIX century.
1859 - In accordance with calculations of Petr Vasilievich Khavskiy (1771-1876), an historian, a jurist and a specialist in Russian chronology, a prototype of a moderm clock with zone type - 'Indicator of time of the whole globe from the side of the North pole' - was made. In a quarter of a century after Khavskiy created his 'time indicator', representatives of 26 states in Washington made a decision about introduction of zone time with a single zero Greenwich meridian.
1867 - Production of tower clocks organized by the company 'Friedrich Winter'. In 1896, at the All-Russian Exhibition of Industry and Art in Niznhiy Novgorod, the clocks were given the highest reward - the Gold medal.
1868 - Victor Gabu opens a firm (a house of trade), which later became one of the most famous ones.
End of the century - clock boom in Russia;
Since 1875 a clock factory was founded in a
Faberge orders clock mechanisms from Bure and Mozer.
At the end of the XIX century, rates of production of clocks in
First half of the XX century.
1900 - Professor N. Zavadskiy founded the first clock-making educational institution in
1927 - on 11 December, the Council of Labor and Defense issued a Decree 'About organization of clock production in the
1930 - the first 50 items of pocket watches from domestically produced parts were made in the recently organized 'First Moscow Clock-Making Plant'. This was the beginning of the Russian clock-making industry.
Second half of the XX century.
1961 - Yu. A. Gagarin took to his flight a 'Shturmanskiye' (navigator's) wristwatch.
1977 - watches of the First Moscow Clock-Making Plant 'made a journey' to the North Pole on the atomic-powered vessel 'Arctica'.
1991 - the watch 'Poljot' received 'Gold Trophy for Quality' in
1998 - the watch 'Poljot' became a nominee of the 'Best Clock of the Year ' competition in
Quelques marques
Anlina www.anlina.ru
Chaika www.chaika-watch.ru
Orion www.orion1.ru
Poljot www.poljot.ru
NO.Y Maxim Nazarov www.nazarovdesign.ru
Molnija www.molnija.ru
Penza www.zaria.ru
Cosmonavigator www.right-move.ru
Tech Art www.techart-clock.ru
Volmax www.burantime.ru
Vostok www.vostok-inc.com
Zolotoe Vremya www.goldtime.ru







